Lovett, William

Lovett, William, born of humble origins in Newlyn, near Penzance in Cornwall, on 8 May
1800. He moved to London in 1821 and gradually established himself as a cabinet-maker,
rising to the presidency of the Cabinetmakers' Society before the end of the 1820s. A
self-educated man, Lovett became an ardent Owenite and participated actively in the early
trade union movement. In 1836 he played a major role in the formation of the London
Working Men's Association, which was intended to be an educational as well as political
force for the improvement of the lot of the working classes in Britain by constitutional
and peaceful means. He served as Secretary of the Association and was largely responsible
for drafting its famous "People's Charter" in 1838.

Chartist activities led to Lovett's conviction and twelve months imprisonment for sedition
in 1839-40, following his publication of a pamphlet denouncing police brutality. Thereafter,
Lovett gradually lost his faith in the Chartist movement largely because of his distrust
of the more militant supporters of Chartism and his intense dislike of Feargus O'Connor
whom he viewed as an unprincipled demagogue. Nevertheless, Lovett's name
remained associated with the so-called "moral force" wing of the movement. Following
the Chartist collapse in 1848, Lovett became owner of the National Hall in Holborn and
spent his last years promoting the cause of popular education which he always deemed
essential for social progress. He died in poverty on 8 August 1877, one year after
the publication of his autobiography.